Q: How much did it cost to send a tiny robotic drone to mars?Q: How much more would it cost to send multiple humans and ALL the equipment to support for a minimal amount of time...include state-of-the-art renewal systems?Q: Why is anyone taking this seriously?

The gravity problem is probably solved by rotating stuff on the ship. It is much easier to build or send and use a similar system on the surface of mars than in space if there are any bone issues there.

Maybe they will have to spend some time in a rotating device on mars as well, for example during sleep. I think it is that "easy"

Because your inner ear tells you that you are stationary (constant acceleration, just like gravity)

Stationary = constant speed, not accelearation. You definetely wouldn't feel stationary if you jump from the 10th floor... You'll feel the acceleration (gravity changing your velocity) all the way down, and then when you hit the floor (constant Velocity = 0) you'll be dead stationary...

So, as long as you don't have windows in your spinning vehicle, it'll be just fine.

Actually as soon as you stand up, it isn't, not for any length of time. You have less gravity at your head than you do at your feet, which is going to make your equilibrium scream "something is WRONG!!!" the whole time, especially when you start walking around.

That part might be fixable with experience (sailors don't get seasick after all) and possibly some surgical tweaks to the inner ear. You'd have to spin fast as hell to get even a moderate size ship to 0.3G, and that makes the differential worse.

A machine that makes bricks, so they can construct new living quarters (covered by sand and sealed by a thin plastic foil to keep the air in)Stop! You're killing me here!

That doesn't sound implausible at all. A brick press isn't exactly ultra high tech, just repurpose a hydraulic pump or two from the ship. 'course making bricks from what amounts to sand and not clay dirt might be a bit trickier.

So, as long as you don't have windows in your spinning vehicle, it'll be just fine.

Actually as soon as you stand up, it isn't, not for any length of time. You have less gravity at your head than you do at your feet, which is going to make your equilibrium scream "something is WRONG!!!" the whole time, especially when you start walking around.

We have the same problem on Earth, so I guess whether it is relevant, depends on the diameter of your rotating vehicle

I guess we can make those vehicles fold out in space, just like with solar panels, so that we don't have to launch objects with horrible aerodynamics.

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It occurs to me that bricks would become more plausible if you added some organic material from the outside to substitute for the clay. Perhaps "contributed" by the crew, lending some verisimilitude to another phrase involving bricks...

You can't just take material out of the cycle that produces and transforms food. Also, bringing the materials to create bricks to Mars would be rather inefficient, as there are lighter and stronger materials available to build walls.

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A machine that makes bricks, so they can construct new living quarters (covered by sand and sealed by a thin plastic foil to keep the air in)Stop! You're killing me here!

That doesn't sound implausible at all. A brick press isn't exactly ultra high tech, just repurpose a hydraulic pump or two from the ship. 'course making bricks from what amounts to sand and not clay dirt might be a bit trickier.

brick houses covered in plastic wrap? water? or hydrogen? Really good sleeping bags? Need decomp rooms and a pair of very good pumps. two really good sealing doors. water vapor & condensation in decomp room? Ya gotta be kidding me.

Then the "ambassadors":Last one: Reality TV dude. Ah! I see. Humanity driven thing. What better way to "choose" the astro's by having a show where we all choose who goes by watching them during training...say making brick houses and wrapping them in plastic wrap..AND make money for the mission. Call X: press '1' to vote for Chaz, '2' for ...

"Suzanne Flinkenflögel (1982) is responsible for the marketing and communications of Mars One. She graduated in 2005 in International Business Communications and Spanish at the University of Nijmegen. She is known for her online marketing and social media knowledge and is passionate about webanalytics."

"Suzanne Flinkenflögel (1982) is responsible for the marketing and communications of Mars One. She graduated in 2005 in International Business Communications and Spanish at the University of Nijmegen. She is known for her online marketing and social media knowledge and is passionate about webanalytics."

2500 hits on Google.

Googled my own name for ~490 000 hits.

Wowee you're popular. I'm only looking at 44,000... then again my name is not at all common, if your name is like "Bill Miller" then you'll get a lot of hits that aren't relevant to you specifically. This Suzanne chick has an extremely unusual name.

I can't help thinking of "Capricorn One" and then there was the UK reality TV show "Space Cadets".The latter was pretty funny (they carefully selected non-science people) and you can find some of it on youtube.

At the moment, I can't see the point of a manned mission to mars. The environment is pretty hostile. Robots are better suited to go there. Gravity is about a third of earths, leading to low atmospheric pressure, which in turn makes liquid water unlikely, as it would tend to vapourise. There is ice at the poles though. Maybe one could design some sort of nitrogen-fixing bacteria that could live over the temperature range, except that the atmosphere has less than 3% nitrogen; it's mostly carbon dioxide. After 5 minutes of googling (so now an expert), I'm not convinced we are going anytime soon, although EASA and NASA think they are going there post 2030ish.

A trip to the Mars chocolate factory would be much easier, quicker and there's chocolate. I visited Rowntrees (Nestle) once years ago.

Yeah I heard about his one: Apparently there are some particles that go through they eyes, even when closed and causes people to see stuff. In a long run it might screw up the eyes somehow.Not sure about the "male" criteria.Its just another form of dangerous radiation in space, what else is new

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